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On the Derivation of Ulysses from Don Quixote

I IMAGINE THIS story being told to me by Jorge Luis Borges one evening in a Buenos Aires cafe.

His voice dry and infinitely ironic, the aging, nearly blind literary master observes that "the Ulysses," mistakenly attributed to the Irishman James Joyce, is in fact derived from "the Quixote."

I raise my eyebrows.

Borges pauses to sip discreetly at the bitter coffee our waiter has placed in front of him, guiding his hands to the saucer.

"The details of the remarkable series of events in question may be found at the University of Leiden," he says. "They were conveyed to me by the Freemason Alejandro Ferri in Montevideo."

Borges wipes his thin lips with a linen handkerchief that he has withdrawn from his breast pocket.

"As you know," he continues, "the original handwritten text of the Quixote was given to an order of French Cistercians in the autumn of 1576."

I hold up my hand to signify to our waiter that no further service is needed.

"Curiously enough, for none of the brothers could read Spanish, the Order was charged by the Papal Nuncio, Hoyo dos Monterrey (a man of great refinement and implacable will), with the responsibility for copying the Quixote, the printing press having then gained no currency in the wilderness of what is now known as the department of Auvergne. Unable to speak or read Spanish, a language they not unreasonably detested, the brothers copied the Quixote over and over again, re-creating the text but, of course, compromising it as well, and so inadvertently discovering the true nature of authorship. Thus they created Fernando Lor's Los Hombres d'Estado in 1585 by means of a singular series of copying errors, and then in 1654 Juan Luis Samorza's remarkable epistolary novel Por Favor by the same means, and then in 1685, the errors having accumulated sufficiently to change Spanish into French, Moliere's Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, their copying continuous and indefatigable, the work handed down from generation to generation as a sacred but secret trust, so that in time the brothers of the monastery, known only to members of the Bourbon house and, rumor has it, the Englishman and psychic Conan Doyle, copied into creation Stendhal's The Red and the Black and Flaubert's Madame Bovary, and then as a result of a particularly significant series of errors, in which French changed into Russian, Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Anna Karenina. Late in the last decade of the 19th century there suddenly emerged, in English, Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, and then the brothers, their numbers reduced by an infectious disease of mysterious origin, finally copied the Ulysses into creation in 1902, the manuscript lying neglected for almost thirteen years and then mysteriously making its way to Paris in 1915, just months before the British attack on the Somme, a circumstance whose significance remains to be determined."

I sit there, amazed at what Borges has recounted. "Is it your understanding, then," I ask, "that every novel in the West was created in this way?"

"Of course," replies Borges imperturbably. Then he adds: "Although every novel is derived directly from another novel, there is really only one novel, the Quixote."
--- David Berlinski
1 posted on 11/18/2015 9:52:55 AM PST by Heartlander
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To: Heartlander

Is this the manuscript pulled out of the muck by the hen Belinda?

As far as this article, it doesn’t work. The grammar analogy doesn’t cut it.


2 posted on 11/18/2015 9:59:35 AM PST by ifinnegan
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To: Heartlander
Well, huh.

Still, I can't help being impressed.

Tagline

3 posted on 11/18/2015 10:02:08 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o ("And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt amongst us.")
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To: Heartlander

Bookmark


4 posted on 11/18/2015 10:07:21 AM PST by aquila48
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To: Heartlander

The late Erich Heller, author of The Disinherited
Mind, might well agree with Borges!:)


5 posted on 11/18/2015 10:09:33 AM PST by milagro (There is no peace in appeasement!)
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To: Heartlander

How can the mechanics of “evolution” give us a complex language and how could an organism successfully live and successfully reproduce when it had not yet developed this complex language?


8 posted on 11/18/2015 10:46:43 AM PST by theBuckwheat
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To: Heartlander

“The genome contains all the information needed to build and maintain an organism”

I can not believe that any contemporary publication that claims it’s “scientific” is still publishing such rubbish. When any living cell divides,the entire contents of the organism is duplicated, not just the chromosomes.

If one were to expand just a single cell to the size of a 3-D football field, one would see that this cell is the most complex factory in the universe, one in which its nano-machines are made from assemblies of molecular fento-machines. It is THAT cellular factory that is duplicated along with the microcode encoded in the chromosomes each and every time any cell divides.

And without that PRE-EXISTING cellular factory to operate, the chromosomal microcode by itself is useless, not to mention that the information inherent to the structure of the cellular factory itself may in fact be greater in content than the microcode information encoded in the chromosomes.


13 posted on 11/18/2015 1:16:04 PM PST by catnipman (Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!)
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